The flight was totally...unmanned.

Unmanned commercial flights are the way of the future, both because technology will soon make the human workforce obsolete and because teams of workers don't need to include men to be successful.

On Wednesday, Southwest Airlines took a moment to celebrate an all-female flight crew. "The first 'unmanned' Southwest flight on a @BoeingAirplanes 737 MAX 8!," according to the tweet. The company posted three pictures, adding, "All-female Crew pic taken before flying STL - SFO." The best of the triptych is certainly the two women cheesin' on the tarmac, though the ladies look great in all of them.

Almost all of the responses to the tweet were positive, although there was, of course, the usual mix of misogynists and trolls predicting that the plane would crash, which it definitely did not. When one response expressed regret that it took this long, another Twitter user noted that the particular aircraft was new. Got to love a plane enthusiast.

Another man pointed out that the airline wouldn't be so quick to celebrate an all-male crew, to which Southwest responded, "You're right--that's happened quite a few more times." BURN.

According to HuffPost, just under seven percent of airline pilots are female, making this sight a rare one and lending a new historical context to the Gwyneth Paltrow film, View From The Top. For their part, Southwest was the first major airline to have a female president, Colleen C. Barrett, and have staffed other flights on other aircrafts with all-female crews in the past. The company also "donated $33,500 to fund scholarships for five female students to pursue careers in aviation" through Women in Aviation Inc., per HuffPost.